Home Business Forums - Online Business Forums

A warm welcome to the forums!We hope you will make this your home. Dave and Heidi, the founders of HomeBusinessOnline.com, are committed to helping you find all the information and resources you need to succeed in your home-based business. John is an excellent moderator of the forums and has an amazing amount of knowledge in small business.

Rule #1:If you are new, please introduce yourself first in the "This is Who I Am" Forum. We would all like to get to know you.

Rule #4: Be sure to complete your forum profile. Upload a picture of yourself. Only members will be able to view your profile and many will be interested in what you have to offer.

Rule #5: Please don't be a one-post wonder. Be active and participate often on the forums. You may wish to also leave valuable comments on the blog. We are glad you are here. Now, let us get to know you!

How to create a powerful 2.0 sites?As we often do, 2.0 is very weak to be a satellite site. I have post a lot of content on 2.0 sites and then create some backlinks on them. But there is no effect after that. I think that they are too weak to help us rank.is there any tips to increase their link juice or power?

The Semantic Web may can possibly help make the Internet a substance in its own particular right. Parallel handling, the interfacing of PCs to make super PCs, has been in presence for quite a while. Truth be told, that is the means by which the human mind works, by directing numerous operations in the meantime.

The other entrancing thought Berners-Lee communicated in this historic point book is that his unique thought for the Web included significantly more of a two-path trade of data. His unique vision for the Web was one of cooperation. He needed individuals to have the capacity to present data on the Web as effortlessly as it was to see data. Sadly, the last has been grasped all the more promptly by the overall public.

Yet, now we see the rise of "Web 2.0", a genuinely new term that portrays an inventive kind of site that is based on the investment of its clients. Websites, wikis Podcasts and interpersonal organizations all fall under the Web 2.0 umbrella.

Today we are at long last accomplishing what Berners-Lee had at the top of the priority list from the beginning. With sites, for example, MySpace, YouTube, Flickr, Squidoo, and Digg, non-specialized clients would now be able to present data and contribute on the Web as effectively as they can get to it. The Web without bounds will grasp this idea significantly all the more, making its speed of development obscure the present rate.